Here on the Hill---- • OLD LETTERS WERE USED TO WRITE THE TEXT. an account of Mt. Oread Society UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE TWO TUES., NOV.12, 1940 Hill Spends Armistice Day Reading, Writing, Resting Lady Carrying Torch---weekend guests were Mr. and Mrs. Don McIlrath of Great Bend, Mr. and Mrs. George Benson and Mary Wixson of ElDorado, Sally Morris of Emporia, Ada Moseley of Kansas City, Mo. The joe that designed this dress is an automotive engineer, so if you detect any similarity to the chromium work on your new Oldsmobile in this gown, you know the reason why. The dregs of humanity who remained on the Hill yesterday got the benefit of a surprise snowfall and an empty campus. Co-educators kept their home fires burning and last minute Phi Beta Kappa's filled the library cramming for mid-seemesters, while their more fortunate friends took the quickest train home to forget it all. CHI OMEGA . . . SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON . . . Mary Frances McKay of El-Dorado, Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Moore and Bob Guy of Newton, Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Joggerst of Kansas City, Mo., Mrs. George Cochran of Kinsley, Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Gillis of Kansas City, Mo., Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Handleey of Kansas City, Mo., Mr. and Mrs. Silas Brown, and Alice Louise, John and Joe of Wichita. ... guests over the weekend were Sue Skates, Betty Listz, and Patty Schaeffer, of Topeka; Mr. and Mrs. Bremeyer and daughter of McPherson; Mr. and Mrs. John B. Gage; Mr. and Mrs. John W. Ballard, Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Miller, and Doctor and Mrs. Wagner, Mr. and Mrs. Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Clad Thompson, all of Kansas City, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. Gerard Little of Kansas City, Kans.; Miss Francis Koehler and Mrs. Denver Thornton of Kansas City, Mo.; Don Ebbling, Ray Ebbling, Richard Hogan, Betty McVey, Pat Cravens, Dale Hall. ... Mary Fitzgerald, Benny Morrison, Spencer Self, Rance Edwards, Roy S. Johnson of Wichita, Verner Smith of Lawrence, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Pardce; Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Bond and daughter Betty of ElDorado. GAMMA PHI BETA . . . ... weekend guests were Pat Cravens of Excelsior Springs, Mo.; Rose Allison and Betty McVey of Kansas City, Mo.; B. J. Boddington of Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Markham of Parson, and Mary Alice Livingston of Kingman. ALPHA OMICRON PI . . . ALPHA CHI OMEGA . . . ... weekend guests were Evelyn Witt of Russell. Colleen Roberts of Hays, Mrs. Murray Regier of Newton, Mr. and Mrs. Burt Peterson of Newton, Mrs. Al Peterson of Newton, Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Morgan of Beaumont, Dr. and Mrs. W. J. Reid of Gardner, Anna Louise Larbon and Dr. and Mrs. John Sheldon of Kansas City, Mo. ... dinner guests Saturday were Jean and Frances Stark, Kansas City, Mo; Marjorie Moch, Topeka; Pauline Sherman, Topeka; Betty Heitemann, Kansas City, Mo.; Tillie Fowler, Kansas City, Mo.; Grace Valentine, Clay Center; Anna Catherine Kiehl, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Caton, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Leimert, Kansas City, Mo.; Miss Nell Clark, Troy. ... Sunday dinner guests were as follows: . . Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. Greene of Wichita; Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Bruess, St. Joseph, Mo.; Major E. C. Whitehead, Washington, D.C.; Mrs. H. J. Brownlee, Kansas City, Mo.; Miss Alta Ward, St. Joseph, Mo.; Robert B. Wilkins, Phillips, Texas; a n d Marilyn Scandrett, Kansas City, Mo. . . . weekend guests were Mrs. A. H. Martin, Burdett; R. D. Childs, Des Moines, Iowa; Clinton Wood, Garnett; Chauncey Cox, Kansas City; Eugene De Fries, Walton Kabler, Herschel L. Washington of Kansas City, Mo.; Milton V. Meier, North Kansas City, Mo.; Marvin Cox, Kingman. ACACIA . . . Treece of Lawrence; J. R. Eggleston, Medicine Lodge; Sam Pinder, Mission; T. G. McCain, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Woodman and family, Overland Park; Robert Hess, Topeka; George W. Logue of Tulsa, Okla. Mary Louise Eddens, Kelvin V. Hoover, T. L. Johnson, Richard Martin, Arthur Nichols, Dr. E. L. PI BETA PHI . . . . . weekend guests were Barbara Smythe of Wichita, Ann and Martha Browning of Lee's Summit, Mo., Leone Hoffman of Kansas City, Mo.; Elizabeth Kirsch of Kansas City, Mo., and Marianna Bantleon of Edwardsville. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Krainbill of Bern announce the marriage of their daughter, Ruth Kathryn, c'41, to Carl Retting Roller, c'40, at the home on Nov. 9. The couple was attended by Miss Agnes Mummert, c'41, and Donald Rollert, brother of the groom. KRAINBILL-ROLLERT . . . ★★ Romance Is Out Mr. Rollert is a member of Theta Tau, engineering fraternity. ★★★ They will make their home in Tonganoxie where Mr. Rollert is an engineer for WREN. Four Golden Rules San Francisco, Calif., Nov. 12- (UP)Four rules have been formulated by the San Francisco Family Relations Center that are virtually guaranteed to lead up to an unhappy marriage, a broken home, divorce or gen- They are as follows. 1—Marry young, preferably under the age of 21. 2. Have a lot of beautiful romantic illusions. 3—Let the wife support her husband while he goes on to college and studies law, medicine or some other profession. broken home, divorce or general marital collapse. 4—Don't bother learning anything about the basis of marriage until yours has started to crack. The four rules are part of a report on the center's activities and experience prepared by Dr. Noel Keyes of the University of California, and Dr.J.V. Berman of Stanford University. Both are experts in family relations. They have ascertained the chances for unhappiness in marriage are infinitely greater when the young people wed at 21 than when they marry at 25. Marriages under 25, under present social and economic conditions, they regard as "hazardous." The ideal age, claims Dr. Keyes, is 23 for the woman and 28 for the man. The ideal age for child-bearing is placed at between 23 and 34. According to the most recent census figures available, the report finds 20 per cent of all marriages are made when the woman is under 20. Dr. Berreman assails the current custom of wives supporting husbands who are finishing a professional training in college. At the end of such a training, Dr. Berreman has found, the husband often finds he has "outsrown" his wife. He also decries romantic illusions. "They are particularly hazardous to marital success, and are one of the chief factors in the early failure of marriages," he declared. Both urge that courses in marriage be included in all high school programs. Elect Fifteen To Tau Beta Pi Fifteen students in the School of Engineering were elected to Tau Beta Pi, national honorary engineering fraternity Thursday. They were Herman George Barkmann, senior; Oliver John Baeke, senior; Ralph Glen Adams, senior; Lester Tint, senior; Ed O'Bryon, senior; William Bray Lash, senior; Leander Lawrence Claassen, senior; Robert Vernon Bullock, senior; Herbert Gillette Hoover, junior; Thomas Arthur Schlegel, senior; Ben Petree, junior; Arthur Wahl, junior; and Albert Wieland, junior. DE LUXE CAFE These students represent the highest one-eighth of the junior class and the highest one-fourth of the senior class of the School of Engineering. The local chapter, founded in 1903, is one of 75 throughout the United States, and the only national honorary engineering society in the state of Kansas. Our 22nd year in serving K.U. Students. 711 Mass. St. TUE Legs are much more glamorous in sheer hose, after they've been hair-freed by IMRA!* IMRA, as you must know by now, is the pure white cosmetic cream depilatory WITHOUT objectionable chemical odors. Painless. Pleasant. Goes on quickly. Stays on briefly. Washes right off, taking unwanted hair with it. Leaves skin on legs, arms, underarms, beautifully hairfree...feminine! No odor to haunt the room! • We have IMRA in three sizes. 65¢, $1.00, $1.25. Get a tube today! muo soo saio